El 29 de junio de 2021 finalizó la etapa de desarrollo, actualizaciones y soporte técnico de la primera versión del sistema TimeWork Reloj Checador. Invitamos a nuestros antiguos usuarios a conocer cómo les afecta este cambio y de qué forma pueden migrar al nuevo sistema.
Unlike Bollywood, which is still largely star-driven, Malayalam cinema has democratized. The "star" is the story. Prithviraj Sukumaran produces and acts, but he also directs Lucifer (2019), a political action film that is still rooted in Kerala's district-level political rivalries (a direct nod to the CPI(M) and Congress factions).
The "Gulf returnee" is a stock character—the man in a branded white kandura or ill-fitting suit, carrying a gold chain and a VCR. Films like Varavelpu (1989) showed the tragicomedy of a man who goes to Dubai to make money, returns with grand dreams, and ends up as a bus conductor. Unda (2019) shows the opposite: police officers sent to the Maoist belt, but their identity is defined by their Gulf-craving, Halal eating, pragmatic nature. The "Gulf returnee" is a stock character—the man
Kerala boasts one of the highest literacy rates in India, and this literacy manifests in the dialogue of its cinema. The Malayali has a deep love for shlesha alankaram (pun) and nuanced repartee. Kerala boasts one of the highest literacy rates
The late writer Sreenivasan and actor Mohanlal (in his prime) revolutionized the "sadharana karan" (common man) dialogue. Films like Sandhesam (The Message) are not comedies; they are political textbooks. The film satirized the Gulf-returned Malayali who imposes strict "God's Own Country" morals on everyone while simultaneously exploiting the system. The line "Ee locality-il oru Aduthila bhavam venam" (We need a sense of belonging here) became a shorthand for the hypocrisy of NRI culture. returns with grand dreams
Furthermore, the famous "Mohanlal stare" or the "Mammootty swagger" are cultural tropes. When a Malayali watches Mohanlal struggle to keep his mundu (traditional dhoti) from unraveling while running for a bus, it is not a gag. It is a documentary on Kerala’s daily struggle between dignity (the mundu) and pragmatism (the bus).